Alstom: Hollande to meet rival US, German bidders

Published: 28 Apr 2014 12:00 GMT+02:00

In an effort to protect French interests and jobs, President François Hollande will meet on Monday with bosses from US-based GE and German firm Seimens as they battle to buy-out French industrial giant Alstom.

French President Francois Hollande, fighting to protect national interests in takeover target Alstom, is to meet rival bidders General Electric of the United States and German group Siemens on Monday, official sources said.

Hollande is to have separate talks with the top management of Siemens, which his government appears to favour as a partner for Alstom, and with the head of General Electric (GE), Jeffrey Immelt.

Hollande would also meet Martin Bouygues, the head of the key shareholder in Alstom, French construction, telecom and media firm Bouygues.

The high-level talks are part of a race by the French Socialist government to protect Alstom's decision-making centre in France, jobs, and strategic energy interests, in what Economy Minister Arnaud Montebourg has described as a "patriotic" response to an expected bid by GE.

At the end of last week it emerged that GE was in advanced talks to buy Alstom's energy interests for about 10 billion euros ($14 billion).

Energy activities account for about 70 percent of Alstom's business, with the rest being focused mainly on making railway equipment including the TGV high-speed train.

GE already has big energy manufacturing activities in France, but Montebourg objected on Monday to the possibility that in a matter of days Alstom could made a decision to sell these to a US company which takes its decision in the state of Connecticut.

Montebourg said on French RTL radio that he would not accept that "Alstom, in three days, can decide to sell 75 percent of a national jewel behind the backs of the employees, of the government, of most of the board and of the senior executives."

He said: "French companies are not prey, however we are prepared to tie up alliances enabling us to face up to global competition."

"In the last few days we have taken several initiatives, the first being to reject a fait accompli," he added.

The minister said that a bid from GE raised a simple problem which was that "the main part of Alstom, 75 percent of the businesses, 65,000 employees in the world, is going to be run from Connecticut."

Alstom is under pressure because its main markets for power generation and rail equipment are expected to be weak in the next few years.

Its share price has fallen heavily in the last year, pushing Bouygues into loss, although Alstom shares jumped on the bid reports.

Economists say that Alstom is too small alongside giants such as GE and Siemens and that it is uncompetitive.

They also comment that the French government, since selling its stake in 2006, has little real control over what the Alstom board decides, and they tend to the view that strategically a deal with GE would have a better strategic fit than one with Siemens.

Ten years ago, when Alstom had to be rescued and was shorn of its shipbuilding interests, France cold-shouldered takeover interest from Siemens which is now believed to be interested in acquiring Alstom energy activities in exchange for handing the French group its own rail interests to create two giant, specialised European groups.

The French government, in a recent policy switch and amid growing signs that French industry is seriously uncompetitive, is proposing big cuts in planned public spending so as to relieve taxes on businesses, but faces strong opposition from its left wing in a crucial vote this week.

The case of Alstom is highly sensitive politically and is also seen as emblematic of deep strains in many parts of French industry.

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